The seven were detained in a dawn raid on a hotel on the eve of FIFA's World Congress in Zurich, Switzerland, on the basis of a request from the United States.
Among
them is UK citizen Jeffrey Webb, a FIFA vice president and head of
CONCACAF, the soccer governing body for North America and the Caribbean.
Another is Jose Maria Marin, head of
the Brazilian Football Federation from March 2012 to April 2015. Marin
also served as head of the 2014 World Cup committee. The 83-year-old was
also governor of Sao Paulo for a short period in the 1980s.
The
arrests at the heart of soccer's governing body shocked the wider world
of football and were followed within days by the announcement by newly reelected FIFA president Sepp Blatter that he would resign.
In its 47-count indictment,
issued in Brooklyn, the U.S. Department of Justice accused 14 people of
racketeering, wire fraud and money laundering conspiracy.
The
FIFA officials held in Zurich are among those being investigated for
taking bribes worth huge sums over more than two decades.
"In
return, those suspected of paying the bribes -- representatives of
sports media and sports promotion firms -- are believed to have received
media, marketing and sponsorship rights for soccer tournaments in the
United States and in Latin America," the Swiss justice department
statement said.
"These crimes are thought to have been agreed and prepared in the USA, and payments were allegedly routed through U.S. banks."
The
U.S. Embassy in Bern on Wednesday submitted formal extradition requests
for the seven arrested, the Swiss justice department said in a
statement Thursday.
The seven FIFA
officials will be given a hearing by Zurich police on the extradition
requests. They will then have another two weeks to respond to the
requests.
After hearing the various
arguments, the Swiss justice department will rule on extradition "within
a few weeks," the statement said. That decision may then be challenged
in the courts.
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